On 15 December, Saudi Arabia made a surprising announcement as it unveiled to the world what it said will be a 34-state “Islamic military alliance” to combat terrorism “all over the Islamic world”.
This ambitious initiative, said Deputy Crown Prince and Defence
Minister Mohammed bin Salman, “emanates from the keenness of the Muslim
world to fight this disease, which has harmed the Islamic world’s
standing in the international community”.
Little is known about how exactly this alliance will operate, but
according official statements it seems there will be a military
component which includes intelligence sharing, a messaging component to
combat ideology, and a sanctions component focused on “stopping the flow of funds” to terror groups.
As for the countries involved, there are notable absentees such as
Iran, Syria and Iraq. Meanwhile, those said to be part of the alliance
are drawn from across Asia, the Middle East and Africa. It remains to be
seen which countries will formally join the Saudi-led coalition, but
one of those considering membership is Nigeria.
On 17 December, Presidential Spokesman Garba Shehu said
that “Nigeria has been formally invited to be a member of the
alliance”, but that the “decision to join has not been taken yet”.
If Nigeria were to join, it would signify a major step-change in
relations with Saudi Arabia. Islam and membership of the Organisation of
the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) have traditionally anchored
the two country’s relationship. But adding security cooperation to that
relationship could have real potential.
Boko Haram clearly has a transnational dimension – it is increasingly
engaging in cross border attacks and has links to other Islamist
militant groups beyond West Africa – and an international security
platform for intelligence cooperation could be hugely useful to Nigerian
security forces. Additionally, further support from the alliance in the
form of funding or training could also significantly enhance
counterterrorism efforts.
However, there are also potential perils from membership that the
Nigerian government should consider seriously as it ponders the Saudi
invitation.
What’s in a name?
The first possible danger comes from the name of the group – the Islamic Military Alliance – and how this could play in Nigeria’s fraught domestic scene.
Soon after news broke of Nigeria’s supposed membership of the
Saudi-led initiative, the Christian Association of Nigeria, the umbrella
body for the country’s Christian groups, registered its protest, saying membership harms “Nigeria’s pluralistic character [and] portends great danger to national unity and integration”.
Should President Muhammadu Buhari sign-off on Nigeria joining,
informing the public early, being transparent about how the decision was
reached, clearly articulating the advantages for Nigeria, and securing
broad elite consensus will be essential to avoid the anti-terror
alliance becoming a polarising factor in the country’s interreligious
relations.
The intense controversy that trailed Nigeria’s membership of the
Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) in 1986 offers salutary
lessons.
When “out of the blue”
news broke in January 1986 that Nigeria had “secretly” become a member
of the OIC the previous month, it sparked a political crisis. The
non-transparent attainment of OIC membership exacerbated what in any
case would have been a contentious issue, and the controversy it sparked
effectively paralysed Nigeria’s participation in the organisation.
“In order to satisfy Muslims, [Nigeria] has not officially withdrawn its membership”, said historian Toyin Falola, “and in order to satisfy Christians, it has refused to play an active role in the OIC”.
If Nigeria joins the Islamic Military Alliance, it will have to be careful as to how it presents this move to the public.
Saudi Arabia’s geopolitical motives
The second problem derives from Saudi Arabia’s geopolitical motives and regional ambitions.
Most responses to the new anti-terror alliance have expressed
scepticism as to the real reasons behind the initiative. The exclusion
of Iran in particular – a country with which Saudi Arabia is locked in
an intense struggle for supremacy in the region – is seen by many as
being indicative of Riyadh’s desire to galvanise the Sunni world against
its rival.
Nigeria’s membership of the anti-terror alliance could entail, if not
explicit support, then at least implicit endorsement of Saudi Arabia’s
geopolitical objectives – objectives that are much broader than simply
countering terrorism.
The sectarian undertones of the Saudi-Iranian rivalry could also have
domestic repercussions for Nigeria given the unresolved tensions
between the Nigerian state and its own restive Shia minority.
Whose terrorists?
Linked to the question of Saudi Arabia’s geopolitical motives is a
third problem: which militant groups will command the alliance’s focus?
Saudi Arabia says the new alliance will confront “any terrorist
organisation that appears in front of us”. But it is clear that the
alliance’s heavyweights will have different perceptions of who the main
threats are.
For Turkey, for example, the role of Kurdish separatists looms large in its concerns.
Ankara’s attention is focused on unseating Syria’s President Assad and
preventing its nightmare scenario of an independent Kurdistan emerging
amidst Syria’s wreckage. Defeating Islamic State comes an important but
distant third in its list of priorities.
Similarly, Saudi Arabia’s view of what constitutes terrorism – as
enshrined in its 2013 anti-terror law – is so broad as to practically
include “any act of protest or criticism” against the monarchy. The law was recently used to execute a prominent Shia cleric and critic of the Saudi monarchy, further inflaming regional tensions and leading to the severing of diplomatic ties with Iran.
A truism in international relations is that the heavyweights in any
alliance generally define its
objectives. The danger for Nigeria in
joining Saudi Arabia’s initiative therefore is that it may find itself
having to stand by the controversial, and sometimes reckless, policies
of its powerful friends in the name of solidarity.
No Algeria
The fourth problem for Nigeria’s possible membership of the alliance is the absence of Algeria.
If one were to map the landscape of Nigeria’s security threats, a
picture would emerge of three separate geographical levels of concern:
stability in the Lake Chad region, where Boko Haram is concentrated,
would constitute ‘vital’ interests; the broader Sahel, which potentially
offers Boko Haram strategic depth and connects Nigeria to the chaos in Libya,
would be of ‘strategic’ interest; and stability in the Levant, where
the so-called Islamic State is based, and beyond would come under
‘peripheral’ interests.
This perspective illuminates Algeria’s importance to Nigeria’s
priorities. Stability in the Sahel is crucial for Nigerian security, and
Algeria is the regional power in that neighbourhood. Despite
its reticence about using military force – its constitution explicitly
forbids external military adventures – Algeria’s potential as a
stabilising power is undeniable.
The Sahel is both a barrier and a highway straddling Nigeria and Libya, the latter of which is arguably home to Islamic State’s most important outpost.
And Nigeria’s limited capability to project its power means close
cooperation with Algeria is essential if the region is to push back
against the further spread of IS.
Since March 2013, intelligence chiefs from eleven countries across
the region – including Nigeria and Algeria – have met every two months,
with foreign ministers meeting every three, as part of the Nouakchott Process
to discuss Sahelian security. Diplomatic energy may well be better
spent improving the performance this multilateral initiative, where
matters affecting Nigeria’s direct strategic interests are concerned,
than in the broader Saudi-led alliance.
In assessing whether to stay in or out
of the Islamic Military Alliance, Nigeria should be careful to weigh
the clear potential advantages against these equally formidable perils.
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